Mets morning briefing 6.22.12

After an off-day, the Mets open the Subway Series. Southpaws Jon Niese (4-3, 3.82 ERA) and Andy Pettitte (3-2, 2.77) match up in the opener.

Friday's news reports:

• Frank Francisco tells Mike Pumain the Post about the Yankees: "I can't wait to strike out those chickens. I want to strike out the side against them. I've done it before." Francisco, pressed about the poultry reference, added: "I think I've said too much already."

• During SNY's show determining the top Mets player in franchise history by position, Tom Seaver buzzed Darryl Strawberry with a zinger. Writes Cody Derespinain Newsday:

But during a question and answer session with the Mets All-Time team, things got testy when SNY's Kevin Burkhardt posed an innocent enough question to Strawberry: "Who would have won a game between the '69 Mets and the '86 Mets, Seaver vs. [Dwight] Gooden?" During his answer, Strawberry took aim at Tom Seaver, the pitcher, saying he "would've loved to get a piece of that with my Louisville Slugger," drawing loud applause from the crowd in attendance. Seaver seemed to chuckle, but later appeared to take aim at Strawberry, the man. "You don't have any handcuffs on your hands, wrists there, do you?" Seaver said. The audience responded with hushed, nervous laughter as Seaver cracked up. For his part, Strawberry handled the incident quickly.

• Columnist John Rowein the Record, meanwhile, objects to the panel's selection of Davey Johnson over Gil Hodges as the all-time manager.

• Ronny Cedeño is expected to rejoin the Mets for Friday's Subway Series opener after a week-long rehab assignment with Triple-A Buffalo. Ruben Tejada (1-for-4, RBI) played a second straight game at shortstop with Buffalo on Thursday, and is expected to remain with the Bisons for a little longer. Read more in the Record.

• Columnist Bob Klapischin the Record notes Citi Field likely will not be as homer-friendly to the Yankees as their Bronx bandbox. Writes Klapsich:

The Mets are wary of the Yankees, and rightly so -- they were swept in the Bronx two weeks ago, and suffered in silence as Johan Santana was crushed for four HRs. But the Mets have two factors working in their favor this time: First, their pitching has reached a surreal level of domination, having run through a stretch of 29 consecutive scoreless innings. And second, unlike the Stadium, hitting home runs in Citi Field is a different reality. It might even be enough to bust down the Yankees a rank, from machines to mere mortals.

Going deep may not be so easy this weekend, despite the new dimensions at Citi Field. Naturally, no one in the Mets organization is saying such a thing publicly. “It’s the Yankees: They have enough power to make their ballpark look small and enough power to make our ballpark look small,” David Wright said. “It’s less about where they play the games than the lineup they run out. They can make a one-run lead a four-run lead real fast. It’s hard to ask a pitching staff -- ours or anyone -- to hold a one-run lead for a whole game against them.” Met radio voice Howie Rose, however, took some abuse from Yankee fans for showing his exasperation on the air at the time and dismissing at least a few of the eight home runs the Yankees hit in that series as cheapies. To which Rose responded: “If you don’t like it, why are you listening to the Mets’ broadcast? Go listen to your own broadcast.”

• Andy McCulloughin the Star-Ledger looks at Daniel Murphy's slump, which prompted Terry Collins to start Jordany Valdespin at second base in two of the three games in the sweep of the Baltimore Orioles. Writes McCullough:

For more than a month, that sensation has eluded Murphy. On May 16, he was hitting .336. Since then, he’s hit .192, with little power behind it heading into the second leg of the Subway Series tonight. Murphy has the most plate appearances (281) of any player yet to hit a home run this season. His .655 on-base plus slugging percentage ranks ninth-worst among National League hitters qualified for the batting title heading into Thursday night’s games. “Dan’s mired in a slump,” manager Terry Collins said last week. “And I never thought Dan Murphy ever got into a slump. He’s such a good hitter.”

• Neil Best in Newsday explains the Mets' move this season to dynamic (floating) ticket pricing based on market conditions, which is designed to keep people buying tickets from the team when resellers such as StubHub have lower prices than the originally determined price on the ticket. Writes Best:

Even with their unexpected success, the Mets are averaging 27,515 in paid attendance, down from 28,390 last year at this point. And they are not above using gimmicks, such as a promotion for the Subway Series in which some prices were tied to the game-time temperature during this week's heat wave. But [executive VP Dave] Howard said the idea is working as intended, getting more people into the ballpark, generating revenue that otherwise might not have been realized and reflecting real-world forces. "The Mets fan will know,'' he said, "that they don't have to go to a secondary market source, because Mets.com is being priced based on the same factors.''

• Prospect Jeurys Familia struggled and was knocked out in a five-run third inning by Norfolk in Triple-A action. Read Thursday's full minor league recap here.

• R.A. Dickey has not allowed an earned run in 42 2/3 innings, and can take the franchise record away from Dwight Gooden (49 innings) when the knuckleballer opposes CC Sabathia on Sunday. Ebenezer Samuel in the Daily News gets Yankees reaction to their upcoming challenge. Team Dickey coverage in the News also includes the knuckleballer's Thursday book signing as well as this article on Dickey's one-time conflict with analyst Bob Ojeda.

• David Waldsteinin the Times notes the last pitcher to no-hit the Yankees in a complete-game effort was an original knuckleballer, Hoyt Wilhelm, on Sept. 20, 1958.

• Raul Ibanez, who played with Dickey in Seattle, tells Kevin Kernanin the Post that Dickey really has taken the knuckleball to a different level in terms of controlling where the pitch is going. "Sometimes the catchers were moving in and then moving away and I said to my teammates, ‘You know what? I think he’s doing that on purpose,’" Ibanez said. "And they said, ‘No, he’s not, he can’t control the knuckleball that way.’ But I felt he was using it like a slider, like a changeup."

Adam Rubin has covered the Mets since 2003. He's a graduate of Mepham High School on Long Island and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He joined ESPNNewYork after spending 10 years at the New York Daily News.
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ABOUT THIS BLOG

Adam Rubin

Adam Rubin has covered the Mets since 2003. He's a graduate of Mepham High School on Long Island and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He joined ESPNNewYork after spending 10 years at the New York Daily News.

Mark Simon

Mark Simon is ESPN Stats & Information's Baseball Research Specialist. One of several Mets historians working at ESPN, he joined the Worldwide Leader in 2002 after 6 1/2 years as a sports writer at the Trenton Times.